Pheromones do the trick
Ever since the lessons of biology during the childhood days, one has been amazed at how various animal species interact with each other. It feels wonderful how different life forms are living on one planet and despite so many disparities and variations the plants and animals are existing since ages. The way the various species interact amongst themselves is indeed something which raises one’s interest. They have a special way to interact within the species and this varies from species to species. Pheromones are one way in which members of a particular species interact with each other.
Pheromones are basically some chemically substance which can impact the behavior and response of an individual that has received the chemical. They are responsible to some extent for the feedback that a member of a species receives from the other members. They act outside the body of the individual who has secreted them. Therefore pheromones are critical in how an individual is perceived or received by the members of its own species. It is not necessary that all those organisms that release pheromones get the same effect because it depends on the size of the organism that is releasing the pheromone. There are certain physical limits that the organism is neither too small nor too big.
Some of the vertebrates and insects use pheromones to communicate amongst themselves. Some of the plants also use pheromones to interact. The variety of pheromones that are released by various organisms is high and it might be possible that a particular pheromone is good or effectively released by the organism while some other is not effective for the being. This does depend on the size of the being.
The various pheromones are generally classified on the basis of the information that needs to be conveyed for which they are released. These are releaser pheromones, alarm pheromones, epideictic pheromones, aggregation pheromones, territorial pheromones, information pheromones, trail pheromones and sex hormones amongst others. Royal pheromones and nasonov pheromones have been seen in bees and working bees respectively. The pheromones can be released during a fight, or when someone wants to leave some trail behind or to attract some one sexually.
The release of pheromones in humans has been in discussion for a long time and vomodors and axillary sweat have been said to be as some of the pheromones secreted by humans but no concrete results on human pheromones has been ever achieved. Some products and deodorants also claim to have human pheromones and though it is not clear whether they have pheromones but they can be used as pheromones to attract some one.


